IPv6 Addressing Help

Thomas Mangin thomas.mangin at exa-networks.co.uk
Fri Aug 14 15:28:26 UTC 2009


I do not know about arin but ripe changed it's policy so you only have  
to say "pretty please" to receive your allocation. It better that way  
anyway.

Thomas Mangin

On 14 Aug 2009, at 16:17, Jeroen Massar <jeroen at unfix.org> wrote:

> Chris Gotstein wrote:
>> We are a small ISP that is in the process of setting up IPv6 on our
>> network.  We already have the ARIN allocation and i have a couple
>> routers and servers running dual stack.  Wondering if someone out  
>> there
>> would be willing to give me a few pointers on setting up my  
>> addressing
>> scheme?
>
> Strange, I recall that you had to submit one when requesting address
> space from ARIN. Why don't you use that one?
>
>> I've been mulling over how to do it, and i think i'm making it
>> more complicated than it needs to be.  You can hit me offlist if you
>> wish to help.  Thanks.
>
> It all depends on your network and how you want to set it up, but for
> the sake of internal aggregation:
> * Determine the expected amount of IPv6 customers at a certain
>   location for the next X years, making X > 2 (though 10 is probably a
>   better idea, just in case, if don't want to do it again ;) )
> * Take that number round it up to a power of 2
> * Every customer gets a /48, you know the number, which is a power of
>   2, thus root it, and you know how many bits you need at that site
>
>   eg expect 200 customers, round to power of 2 thus 256, which is 2^8,
>   thus you will need a /48 + 8 bits = /40 at that location.
>
> You now know how much address space you need at that location for the
> next X years.
>
> Repeat that for all your locations / routing areas, basically the PoPs
> or termination points of your customers; or if you are really big do
> that per city/town/suburb. Keep enough space (the rounding helps there
> quite a bit, especially with numbers like 50k customers ;)
>
> Now you have an overview of what you expect to be allocating at each  
> and
> every site. To add a little growth/future proof and to make live easy,
> you could either opt at this stage to round everything off to 'nice'
> numbers, eg only use /40's or /36's per PoP. Thus making everything  
> the
> same, or doing things like grouping smaller PoPs together.
>
> Then when you have done that, take those blocks, and try to squeeze  
> them
> a bit together. You should now have arrived to the address plan that  
> you
> originally submitted to ARIN.
>
> Fill those blocks into a nice database, roll a PHP/shell/perl/whatever
> script to spit out your router configuration and presto: you are done.
>
> Enjoy the weekend ;)
>
> Greets,
> Jeroen
>
>




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